Johnson v. Gantt

606 So. 2d 854, 1992 WL 233188
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 23, 1992
Docket24008-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 606 So. 2d 854 (Johnson v. Gantt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Gantt, 606 So. 2d 854, 1992 WL 233188 (La. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

606 So.2d 854 (1992)

James M. JOHNSON and Mattie Cortez Johnson, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
Michael A. GANTT, Defendant, and
the Town of Cullen, Defendant-Appellant.

No. 24008-CA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

September 23, 1992.
Writ Denied November 30, 1992.

*855 Mayer, Smith & Roberts by Steven E. Soileau, Shreveport, for appellant Town of Cullen.

Charles A. Smith, Minden, John M. Robinson, Springhill, for appellees James & Mattie Johnson.

Before MARVIN, C.J., and NORRIS and BROWN, JJ.

MARVIN, Chief Judge.

In this wrongful death action, we affirm a judgment against the Town of Cullen totalling $380,000 in favor of the parents of 20-year-old Monty Johnson, who was killed when his 23-year-old friend, Michael Gantt, an armed and uniformed Cullen policeman, accidentally shot him in the Cullen police station 15 minutes or so after he and another friend returned to the station with Officer Gantt about an hour after Gantt signed off duty around midnight.

Gantt, who had pleaded guilty to negligent homicide, was also cast in the judgment in this wrongful death action, but does not appeal.

The primary issues concern the trial court's findings that the Town is liable, both vicariously (Gantt was within the course and scope of his employment) and independently (for negligently hiring and failing to train Gantt in firearms safety). Roberts v. Benoit, 605 So.2d 1032 (La. 1991); Ermert v. Hartford Ins. Co., 559 So.2d 467 (La.1990); LeBrane v. Lewis, 292 So.2d 216 (La.1974).

The Town's appeal also questions whether the fatal shot was accidentally or intentionally fired and whether the court abused its discretion in awarding general damages of $185,000 to each parent. The plaintiffs answer the Town's appeal, seeking to increase the award.

We agree with the court's finding that the Town is vicariously liable for the negligence of Gantt. Affirming on that basis, we need not and do not consider whether the Town was independently negligent. Compare Roberts, supra.

We review the record in the light that most favorably supports the judgment, concluding that Gantt, although technically off *856 duty for about an hour before returning to the police station while armed and uniformed, was in the scope and course of his employment when the fatal shooting occurred. In the police station with the victim and another friend, Gantt first unholstered and thereafter negligently manipulated his pistol for several minutes while engaged in a telephone conversation piqued by both his personal and professional curiosity. Gantt's telephone conversation was actuated to some appreciable extent by Gantt's desire to "serve" his employer, the police department of the Town. Ermert, supra, at pp. 478-9.

FACTS

Three months before the January 1991 shooting, Gantt was hired as a policeman for a six-month probationary period to work 32 hours per week. Gantt was then 22 years old, had no prior law enforcement or military experience, and had only completed the ninth grade in school. He was working to achieve a General Education Diploma (GED), the equivalent of a high school diploma, which was required for him to enter basic training at the police academy in Haughton. Cullen required its police officers to complete the basic training as a condition of their being granted full-time permanent employment in that capacity.

The Town provided Gantt with a badge, a uniform and a bullet-proof vest. Gantt furnished his own pistol. Gantt had some limited experience with guns but did not own one until he bought a .357 Magnum shortly after he was hired. The Town was aware and expected, however, its officers to carry a pistol as Gantt had during each day of his employment.

The mayor of Cullen, Bobby Washington, served as the acting police chief during Gantt's employment which began October 1, 1990. Two other officers besides Gantt were employed by the Town, one of whom, John Tofton, like Gantt, was a part-time officer paid by the hour. The most senior officer was Mary Ann Hoof, who was hired about May 1, 1990. She was assigned the duty of training Gantt in "basic procedures of a police officer," such as writing arrest reports and traffic tickets. She had completed the police academy basic training while working part-time as a police officer. The Town and Gantt contemplated that he would complete his GED and then the basic training while working part-time.

Gantt's superiors did not ask him what he knew about guns or take him to a shooting range to assess his firing abilities. Officer Hoof told Gantt only two things about handling his gun: "Never pull it unless your life [is] in danger, and don't leave it laying around."

Gantt worked sometimes alone and sometimes with Officer Hoof. Mayor-Chief Washington and Hoof knew that Gantt, who had a police radio scanner at his home, often responded to "calls" requiring the presence or assistance of the Cullen police when he was technically "off duty." Hoof also knew that Gantt sometimes responded to calls from outside, but nearby, the corporate limits of Cullen. She responded with him to one such call within a few hours of the fatal shooting.

Gantt's shift began at 4:00 p.m. Saturday, January 12, and ended at 1:00 a.m. on January 13, 1991. The fatality occurred about 2:00 a.m. Early on Saturday evening Gantt and Hoof responded to a call about a sick dog, apparently a stray, in someone's garden. Gantt shot the dog three times, killing it. He immediately took the three spent shells out of his gun and put them in his pocket, intending to take them to his father-in-law who reloaded shells for him. Three live rounds remained in Gantt's gun. Gantt did not keep extra live shells on his person, but in a drawer at the police station. He did not reload his gun when he and Hoof returned to the station after killing the dog.

Later on that evening, Gantt and Hoof, having arrested a female, transported her to the nearby police station in Springhill to book and incarcerate her. The City of Springhill and the Town of Cullen have a common corporate boundary, the northern limits of Cullen abutting the southern limits of Springhill. While in the Springhill station, Gantt answered a telephone report by Ms. Kris Ann Gunn, who said that someone *857 had broken the windshield of her car. Ms. Gunn lived immediately south of the Cullen corporate limits.

Gantt knew both Ms. Gunn and her mother, who lived in Cullen. About a month before the fatal shooting Gantt began investigating her mother's complaint of checks being stolen from her home in Cullen. Gantt referred to Ms. Gunn thereafter and in his testimony as Kris Ann. Gantt knew that the mother suspected that either Kris Ann or her brother, Michael Mickens, had stolen her checks.

Kris Ann said she told Gantt in her telephone report at the Springhill station that she suspected her brother had broken her windshield and would likely flee to their mother's home in Cullen.

In response to Kris Ann's telephone report, Gantt relayed the report to a deputy sheriff, who in turn broadcast the report on the police radio to the attention of any officer in the area of Cullen near the Gunn residence. After Gantt and Hoof completed their task at the Springhill station, they drove to Kris Ann's residence, aware, of course, that she lived south of Cullen, outside their jurisdiction. They stayed for a few minutes, departing when a state trooper responded to the radio call.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
606 So. 2d 854, 1992 WL 233188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-gantt-lactapp-1992.